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1.
The sensitivity of the membrane-bound hydrogenase of Bradyrhizobium japonicum to inactivation by proteases and membrane-impermeant protein modification reagents was compared under hydrogen versus oxygen. In membrane vesicles, the half-life of enzyme inactivation by trypsin of the H2-reduced enzyme was approximately 10 min, whereas O2-oxidized enzyme was much less sensitive to trypsin inactivation (half-life of over 90 min). Diazobenzene sulfonate (DABS) affected the enzyme activity in a manner similar to proteases. With DABS, the enzyme had a half-life of 2-3 min under H2 versus over 30 min under O2. Experiments in which the gas phase (containing either H2 or O2) available to the membranes was changed prior to the protease or chemical modification treatments indicated that it is the redox state of the enzyme at the time of the treatment which determines the sensitivity of the enzyme to inactivation. The redox-dependent differences in the behavior of the membrane-bound enzyme were attributed to changes in the accessibility of the small (33 kDa) subunit. The kinetics of enzyme inactivation by trypsin, under H2, correlated very well with the degradation of the intact 33-kDa subunit, whereas the large subunit (65 kDa) was rather resistant to proteolytic degradation. DABS treatment was found to decrease the reactivity of the small subunit to its antibody concomitant with enzyme inactivation under H2, but without such an effect on the O2-oxidized enzyme. In contrast to the results with the membrane-bound enzyme, purified dehydrogenase was found to be equally susceptible to inactivation by proteolysis or chemical modification irrespective of whether the treatments were performed under H2 or O2. These results indicate that, in the membrane, hydrogenase undergoes a redox-linked conformational change, whereby the small subunit of the enzyme becomes more accessible to external reagents when the enzyme is in its reduced form.  相似文献   

2.
Hydrogenases catalyze the reversible activation of dihydrogen. The hydrogenases from the aerobic, N2-fixing microorganisms Azotobacter vinelandii and Rhizobium japonicum are nickel- and iron-containing dimers that belong to the group of O2-labile enzymes. Exposure of these hydrogenases to O2 results in an irreversible inactivation; therefore, these enzymes are purified anaerobically in a fully active state. We describe in this paper an electron acceptor-requiring and pH-dependent, reversible inactivation of these hydrogenases. These results are the first example of an anaerobic, reversible inactivation of the O2-labile hydrogenases. The reversible inactivation required the presence of an electron acceptor. The rate of inactivation was first-order, with similar rates observed for methylene blue, benzyl viologen, and phenazine-methosulfate. The rate of inactivation was also dependent on the pH. However, increasing the pH of the enzyme in the absence of an electron acceptor did not result in inactivation. Thus, the reversible inactivation was not a result of high pH alone. The inactive enzyme could not be reactivated by H2 or other reductants at high pH. Titration of enzyme inactivated at high pH back to low pH was also ineffective at reactivating the enzyme. However, if reductants were present during this titration, the enzyme could be fully reactivated. The temperature dependence of inactivation yielded an activation energy of 44 kJ X mol-1. Gel filtration chromatography of active and inactive hydrogenase indicated that neither dissociation nor aggregation of the dimer hydrogenase was responsible for this reversible inactivation. We propose a four-state model to describe this reversible inactivation.  相似文献   

3.
Rhizobium japonicum hydrogenase was purified to homogeneity from soybean root nodules by four column chromatography steps after solubilization from membranes by treatment with a nonionic detergent. The specific activity was from 40 to 65 mumol H2 oxidized min-1 mg protein-1 and was increased 450-fold relative to that in bacteroids. The yield of activity was from 7 to 12%. The molecular weight of the native enzyme was 104,000 as determined by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate revealed two subunits with molecular weights of 64,000 and 35,000, indicating an alpha beta subunit structure. The amino acid content of the protein indicated 20 cysteine residues. Analysis of the metal content indicated 0.59 +/- 0.06 mol Ni/mol hydrogenase and 6.5 +/- 1.2 mol Fe/mol hydrogenase. Antisera prepared to the hydrogenase cross-reacted with the enzyme in bacteroid extracts at all stages of the purification but did not cross-react with extracts of Alcaligenes eutrophus grown under chemolithotrophic conditions. The similarity of rhizobial hydrogenase to the particulate hydrogenases of A. eutrophus and A. latus is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
We have investigated the effect of added selenite on autotrophic growth and the time course of hydrogen oxidation derepression in Bradyrhizobium japonicum 122DES cultured in a medium purified to remove selenium compounds. In addition, hydrogenase was purified to near homogeneity and examined for the specific incorporation of Se into the enzyme. The addition of Se at 0.1 microM significantly increased total cell protein and hydrogenase specific activity of harvested cells. Also, the addition of SeO3(2-) enhanced the time course of hydrogenase derepression by 133%, whereas VO3, AsO2(2-), SO2(2-), and TeO3(2-) failed to substantially affect hydrogenase derepression. During the final chromatographic purification of hydrogenase, a striking coincidence in peaks of protein content, Se radioactivity, and hydrogenase activity of fractions was obtained. The total Se content expressed per milligram of protein increased manyfold during the purification procedure. The mean Se content of the purified hydrogenase was 0.56 +/- 0.13 mol of Se per mol of enzyme. These results indicate that Se is an important element in the H2 metabolism of B. japonicum and that hydrogenase from B. japonicum is a seleno protein.  相似文献   

5.
Chromatium vinosum hydrogenases I and II were purified to specific activities of 9.6 and 28.0 units/mg protein, respectively. They have the same isoelectric point (pI = 4.1), and their visible spectra are typical of iron-sulfur proteins. Hydrogenase II in general was more stable than hydrogenase I. Both enzymes lost their activities slowly during storage in air, and this inactivation was more apparent in preparations of hydrogenase I. Bovine serum albumin helped to stabilize hydrogenase I against thermal and storage inactivation. The pH optima of H2-evolution activity of hydrogenases I and II were 7.4 and 5.4, respectively. Neither enzyme was able to evolve H2 from reduced ferredoxins as the sole electron carrier, but ferredoxins had an effect on the activity with methyl viologen as carrier to hydrogenase I. None of the natural compounds tested was able to serve as a physiological donor for H2 production. Hydrogenase I was more susceptible than hydrogenase II to inhibition by heavy metal ions and other enzyme inhibitors. Both enzymes were reversibly inhibited by CO with Ki values of 12 and 6 Torr for hydrogenase I and II, respectively. Hydrogenase I was more sensitive to denaturation by urea and guanidinium chloride while hydrogenase II was more susceptible to sodium dodecyl sulfate. Both enzymes were rapidly and irreversibly inactivated by dimethyl sulfoxide. Hydrogenase I evolved H2 from methyl viologen and ferredoxin photoreduced by chloroplasts. The enzymes differed in their iron and acid-labile sulfur contents.  相似文献   

6.
A hydrogenase linked to the carbon monoxide oxidation pathway in Rubrivivax gelatinosus displays tolerance to O2. When either whole-cell or membrane-free partially purified hydrogenase was stirred in full air (21% O2, 79% N2), its H2 evolution activity exhibited a half-life of 20 or 6 h, respectively, as determined by an anaerobic assay using reduced methyl viologen. When the partially purified hydrogenase was stirred in an atmosphere containing either 3.3 or 13% O2 for 15 min and evaluated by a hydrogen-deuterium (H-D) exchange assay, nearly 80 or 60% of its isotopic exchange rate was retained, respectively. When this enzyme suspension was subsequently returned to an anaerobic atmosphere, more than 90% of the H-D exchange activity was recovered, reflecting the reversibility of this hydrogenase toward O2 inactivation. Like most hydrogenases, the CO-linked hydrogenase was extremely sensitive to CO, with 50% inhibition occurring at 3.9 microM dissolved CO. Hydrogen production from the CO-linked hydrogenase was detected when ferredoxins of a prokaryotic source were the immediate electron mediator, provided they were photoreduced by spinach thylakoid membranes containing active water-splitting activity. Based on its appreciable tolerance to O2, potential applications of this hydrogenase are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
The membrane-bound hydrogenases of Bradyrhizobium japonicum, Alcaligenes eutrophus, Alcaligenes latus, and Azotobacter vinelandii were purified extensively and compared. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of each hydrogenase revealed two prominent protein bands, one near 60 kilodaltons and the other near 30 kilodaltons. The migration distances during nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis were similar for all except A. vinelandii hydrogenase, which migrated further than the other three. The amino acid composition of each hydrogenase was determined, revealing substantial similarity among these enzymes. This was confirmed by calculation of S delta Q values, which ranged from 8.0 to 26.7 S delta Q units. S delta Q is defined as sigma j(Xi,j-Xk,j)2, where i and k identify the proteins compared and Xj is the content (residues per 100) of a given amino acid of type j. The hydrogenases of this study were also compared with an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Antibody raised against B. japonicum hydrogenase cross-reacted with all four hydrogenases, but to various degrees and in the order B. japonicum greater than A. latus greater than A. eutrophus greater than A. vinelandii. Antibody raised against A. eutrophus hydrogenase also cross-reacted with all four hydrogenases, following the pattern of cross-reaction A. eutrophus greater than A. latus = B. japonicum greater than A. vinelandii. Antibody raised against B. japonicum hydrogenase inhibited B. japonicum hydrogenase activity to a greater extent than the A. eutrophus and A. latus activities; no inhibition of A. vinelandii hydrogenase activity was detected. The results of these experiments indicated remarkable homology of the hydrogenases from these four microorganisms.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of cyanide on membrane-associated and purified hydrogenase from Azotobacter vinelandii were characterized. Inactivation of hydrogenase by cyanide was dependent on the activity (oxidation) state of the enzyme. Active (reduced) hydrogenase showed no inactivation when treated with cyanide over several hours. Treatment of reversibly inactive (oxidized) states of both membrane-associated and purified hydrogenase, however, resulted in a time-dependent, irreversible loss of hydrogenase activity. The rate of cyanide inactivation was dependent on the cyanide concentration and was an apparent first-order process for purified enzyme (bimolecular rate constant, 23.1 M-1 min-1 for CN-). The rate of inactivation decreased with decreasing pH. [14C]cyanide remained associated with cyanide-inactivated hydrogenase after gel filtration chromatography, with a stoichiometry of 1.7 mol of cyanide bound per mol of inactive enzyme. The presence of saturating concentrations of CO had no effect on the rate or extent of cyanide inactivation of hydrogenases. The results indicate that cyanide can cause a time-dependent, irreversible inactivation of hydrogenase in the oxidized, activatable state but has no effect when hydrogenase is in the reduced, active state.  相似文献   

9.
Pyrodictium brockii is a hyperthermophilic archaebacterium with an optimal growth temperature of 105 degrees C. P. brockii is also a chemolithotroph, requiring H2 and CO2 for growth. We have purified the hydrogen uptake hydrogenase from membranes of P. brockii by reactive red affinity chromatography and sucrose gradient centrifugation. The molecular mass of the holoenzyme was 118,000 +/- 19,000 Da in sucrose gradients. The holoenzyme consisted of two subunits by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The large subunit had a molecular mass of 66,000 Da, and the small subunit had a molecular mass of 45,000 Da. Colorometric analysis of Fe and S content in reactive red-purified hydrogenase revealed 8.7 +/- 0.6 mol of Fe and 6.2 +/- 1.2 mol of S per mol of hydrogenase. Growth of cells in 63NiCl2 resulted in label incorporation into reactive red-purified hydrogenase. Growth of cells in 63NiCl2 resulted in label incorporation into reactive red-purified hydrogenase. Temperature stability studies indicated that the membrane-bound form of the enzyme was more stable than the solubilized purified form over a period of minutes with respect to temperature. However, the membranes were not able to protect the enzyme from thermal inactivation over a period of hours. The artificial electron acceptor specificity of the pure enzyme was similar to that of the membrane-bound form, but the purified enzyme was able to evolve H2 in the presence of reduced methyl viologen. The Km of membrane-bound hydrogenase for H2 was approximately 19 microM with methylene blue as the electron acceptor, whereas the purified enzyme had a higher Km value.  相似文献   

10.
The Ca(2+)-ATPase from skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum was reconstituted into sealed phospholipid vesicles using the method recently developed for bacteriorhodopsin (Rigaud, J.L., Paternostre, M.T. and Bluzat, A. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 2677-2688). Liposomes prepared by reverse-phase evaporation were treated with various amounts of Triton X-100, octyl glucoside, sodium cholate or dodecyl octa(oxyethylene) glycol ether (C12E8) and protein incorporation was studied at each step of the liposome solubilization process by each of these detergents. After detergent removal by SM-2 Bio-Beads the resulting vesicles were analyzed with respect to protein incorporation by freeze-fracture electron microscopy, sucrose density gradients and Ca2+ pumping measurements. The nature of the detergent used for reconstitution proved to be important for determining the mechanism of protein insertion. With octyl glucoside, direct incorporation of Ca(2+)-ATPase into preformed liposomes destabilized by saturating levels of this detergent was observed and gave proteoliposomes homogeneous in regard to protein distribution. With the other detergents, optimal Ca(2+)-ATPase pumping activities were obtained when starting from Ca(2+)-ATPase/detergent/phospholipid micellar solutions. However, the homogeneity of the resulting recombinants was shown to be dependent upon the detergent used and in the presence of Triton X-100 or C12E8 different populations were clearly evidenced. It was further demonstrated that the rate of detergent removal drastically influenced the composition of resulting proteoliposomes: upon slow detergent removal from samples solubilized with Triton X-100 or C12E8, Ca(2+)-ATPase was found seggregated and/or aggregated in very few liposomes while upon rapid detergent removal compositionally homogeneous proteoliposomes were obtained with high Ca2+ pumping activities. The reconstitution process was further analyzed by centrifugation experiments and the results demonstrated that the different mechanisms of reconstitution were driven predominantly by the tendency for self-aggregation of the Ca(2+)-ATPase. A model for Ca(2+)-ATPase reconstitution was proposed which accounted for all our results. In summary, the advantage of the systematic studies reported in this paper was to allow a rapid and easy determination of the experimental conditions for optimal detergent-mediated reconstitution of Ca(2+)-ATPase. Proteoliposomes prepared by the present simple method exhibited the highest Ca2+ pumping activities reported to date in Ca(2+)-ATPase reconstitution experiments performed in the absence of Ca2+ precipitating agents.  相似文献   

11.
Duché O  Elsen S  Cournac L  Colbeau A 《The FEBS journal》2005,272(15):3899-3908
In the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus, the synthesis of the energy-producing hydrogenase, HupSL, is regulated by the substrate H2, which is detected by a regulatory hydrogenase, HupUV. The HupUV protein exhibits typical features of [NiFe] hydrogenases but, interestingly, is resistant to inactivation by O2. Understanding the O2 resistance of HupUV will help in the design of hydrogenases with high potential for biotechnological applications. To test whether this property results from O2 inaccessibility to the active site, we introduced two mutations in order to enlarge the gas access channel in the HupUV protein. We showed that such mutations (Ile65-->Val and Phe113-->Leu in HupV) rendered HupUV sensitive to O2 inactivation. Also, in contrast with the wild-type protein, the mutated protein exhibited an increase in hydrogenase activity after reductive activation in the presence of reduced methyl viologen (up to 30% of the activity of the wild-type). The H2-sensing HupUV protein is the first component of the H2-transduction cascade, which, together with the two-component system HupT/HupR, regulates HupSL synthesis in response to H2 availability. In vitro, the purified mutant HupUV protein was able to interact with the histidine kinase HupT. In vivo, the mutant protein exhibited the same hydrogenase activity as the wild-type enzyme and was equally able to repress HupSL synthesis in the absence of H2.  相似文献   

12.
The agarose-coupled triazine dye Procion Red HE-3B has been demonstrated to be applicable as an affinity gel for the purification of five diverse hydrogenases, namely the soluble, NAD-specific and the membrane-bound hydrogenase of Alcaligenes eutrophus, the membrane-bound hydrogenase of the N2-fixing Alcaligenes latus, the reversible H2-evolving and the unidirectional H2-oxidizing hydrogenase of Clostridium pasteurianum. In the case of the soluble hydrogenase of A. eutrophus, chromatography on Procion Red-agarose even permitted the separation of inactive from active enzyme, thus yielding a 2-3-fold increase in specific activity. For the homogeneous enzyme preparation obtained after two column steps (Procion Red-agarose, DEAE-Sephacel), a specific activity of 121 mumol of H2 oxidized/min per mg of protein was determined. Kinetic studies with free Procion Red provided evidence that the diverse hydrogenases are competitively inhibited by the dye, each with respect to the electron carrier (NAD, Methylene Blue, Methyl Viologen), indicating a specific interaction between Procion Red and the catalytic centres of the enzymes. For the highly purified preparations of the soluble and the membrane-bound hydrogenase of A. eutrophus, in 50 mM-potassium phosphate, pH 7.0, Ki values for Procion Red of 103 and 19 microM have been determined.  相似文献   

13.
To study the physical and catalytic properties of purified membrane proteins, it is often necessary to reconstitute them into lipid bilayers. Here, we describe a fast efficient method for the direct incorporation of cyclooxygenase-1 and -2 (COX-1 and -2) isozymes into liposomes without loss of activity. Purified COX-1 and -2 spontaneously incorporate into large unilamellar vesicles produced from a mixture of DOPC:DOPS (7:3) that has been doped with oleic acid. When incorporation was measured by comparing cyclooxygenase activity to total phospholipid in the proteoliposomes, molar reconstitution ratios of 1000:1 (phospholipid:COX) were obtained. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopic spin counting analysis of proteoliposomes formed with nitroxide spin-labeled COX-2 gave a nearly identical phospholipid:COX ratio, confirming that incorporation had no effect on enzyme activity, and demonstrating that the efficiency of protein incorporation is sufficient for EPR spectroscopic analysis. The spontaneous incorporation of cyclooxygenase into intact liposomes allows only insertion into the outer leaflet for this monotopic enzyme, an orientation confirmed by immunogold staining of the proteoliposomes. This method of reconstitution into liposomes may be generally applicable to the class of monotopic integral membrane proteins typified by the cyclooxygenase isozymes.  相似文献   

14.
Whereas the membrane-bound hydrogenase from Alcaligenes eutrophus H16 is an integral membrane protein and can only be solubilized by detergent treatment, the membrane-bound hydrogenase of Alcaligenes eutrophus type strain was found to be present in a soluble form after cell disruption. For the enzyme of A. eutrophus H16 a new, highly effective purification procedure was developed including phase separation with Triton X-114 and triazine dye chromatography on Procion Blue H-ERD-Sepharose. The purification led to an homogeneous hydrogenase preparation with a specific activity of 269 U/mg protein (methylene blue reduction) and a yield of 45%. During purification and storage the enzyme was optimally stabilized by the presence of 0.2 mM MnCl2. The hydrogenase of A. eutrophus type strain was purified from the soluble extract by a similar procedure, however, with less specific activity and activity yield. Comparison of the two purified enzymes revealed no significant differences: They have the same molecular weight, both consist of two different subunits (Mr = 62,000, 31,000) and both have an isoelectric point near pH 7.0. They have the same electron acceptor specificity reacting with similar high rates and similar Km values. The acceptors reduced include viologen dyes, flavins, quinones, cytochrome c, methylene blue, 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol, phenazine methosulfate and ferricyanide. Ubiquinones and NAD were not reduced. The two hydrogenases were shown to be immunologically identical and both have identical electrophoretic mobility. For the membrane-bound hydrogenase of A. eutrophus H16 it was demonstrated that this type of hydrogenase in its solubilized, purified state is able to catalyze also the reverse reaction, the H2 evolution from reduced methyl viologen.  相似文献   

15.
Thermotoga maritima is the most thermophilic eubacterium currently known and grows up to 90 degrees C by a fermentative metabolism in which H2, CO2, and organic acids are end products. It was shown that the production of H2 is catalyzed by a single hydrogenase located in the cytoplasm. The addition of tungsten to the growth medium was found to increase both the cellular concentration of the hydrogenase and its in vitro catalytic activity by up to 10-fold, but the purified enzyme did not contain tungsten. It is a homotetramer of Mr 280,000 and contains approximately 20 atoms of Fe and 18 atoms of acid-labile sulfide/monomer. Other transition metals, including nickel (and also selenium), were present in only trace amounts (less than 0.1 atoms/monomer). The hydrogenase was unstable at both 4 and 23 degrees C, even under anaerobic conditions, but no activity was lost in anaerobic buffer containing glycerol and dithiothreitol. Under these conditions the enzyme was also quite thermostable (t50% approximately 1 h at 90 degrees C) but extremely sensitive to irreversible inactivation by O2 (t50% approximately 10 s in air). The optimum pH ranges for H2 evolution and H2 oxidation were 8.6-9.5 and greater than or equal to 10.4, respectively, and the optimum temperature for catalytic activity was above 95 degrees C. In contrast to mesophilic Fe hydrogenases, the T. maritima enzyme had very low H2 evolution activity, did not use T. maritima ferredoxin as an electron donor for H2 evolution, was inhibited by acetylene but not by nitrite, and exhibited EPR signals typical of [2Fe-2S]1+ clusters. Moreover, the oxidized enzyme did not exhibit the rhombic EPR signal that is characteristic of the catalytic iron-sulfur cluster of mesophilic Fe hydrogenases. These data suggest that T. maritima hydrogenase has a different FeS site and/or mechanism for catalyzing H2 production. The potential role of tungsten in regulating the activity of this enzyme is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The phospholipid dependence of the UDP-glucose sterol glucosyl transferase (UDPG-SGTase) from maize coleoptiles was previously demonstrated using the partially purified and highly delipidated enzyme, in the presence of the detergent Triton X-100 (P Ullmann, P Bouvier-Navé, P Benveniste [1987] Plant Physiol 85: 51-55). We now report the reconstitution of the enzyme activity into unilamellar lipid vesicles. This was achieved by adding phospholipids, sterols and β-octylglucoside to the solubilized enzyme and passing the mixture through Sephadex G-50. The treatment led to almost complete removal of the detergents. The incorporation of UDPG-SGTase in the lipid vesicles was demonstrated by (a) coelution of the enzyme activity with the labeled lipid vesicles (average diameter: 260Å) on a Sephacryl S-1000 column and (b) flotation experiments on metrizamide density gradients. Release of dithiobis-(2-nitro-benzoic acid) (DTNB) from DTNB-preloaded vesicles was very slow, indicating good membrane integrity of the vesicles. Treatment of the intact vesicles with the nonpermeant reagent p-chloro-mercuribenzene sulfonate led to more than 95% inactivation of the total enzyme activity, i.e. the activity measured in the presence of Triton X-100 at permeabilizing concentration. This suggests an outward orientation for the active site of the enzyme. Finally, the enzyme was incorporated into vesicles of various phospholipid compositions and the kinetic parameters of the reactions were determined. Our results clearly show that the reconstituted UDPG-SGTase activity is stimulated to a large extent by negatively charged phospholipids.  相似文献   

17.
The Ca2(+)-ATPase of skeletal sarcoplasmic reticulum was purified and reconstituted in the presence of phosphatidyl choline using the freeze-thaw sonication technique. The effect of incorporation of negatively charged phospholipids, phosphatidylserine and phosphatidylinositol phosphate, into the phosphatidylcholine proteoliposomes was investigated. Various ratios of phosphatidylserine or phosphatidylinositol phosphate to phosphatidylcholine were used, while the total amount of phospholipid in the reconstituted vesicles was kept constant. Enrichment of phosphatidylcholine proteoliposomes by phosphatidylserine or phosphatidylinositol phosphate was associated with activation of Ca2(+)-uptake and Ca2(+)-ATPase activities. The highest activation was obtained at a 50:50 molar ratio of phosphatidylserine:phosphatidylcholine and at a 10:90 molar ratio of phosphatidylinositol phosphate:phosphatidylcholine. The initial rates of Ca2(+)-uptake obtained at 1 microM Ca2+ were 2.6 +/- 0.1 mumol/min per mg of phosphatidylserine:phosphatidylcholine proteoliposomes and 1.5 +/- 0.1 mumol/min per mg of phosphatidylinositol phosphate:phosphatidylcholine proteoliposomes, compared to 0.9 +/- 0.05 mumol/min per mg of phosphatidylcholine proteoliposomes. These findings suggest that negatively charged phospholipids may be involved in the activation of the reconstituted skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2(+)-pump.  相似文献   

18.
Phospholipid translocation (flip-flop) across membrane bilayers is typically assessed via assays utilizing partially water-soluble phospholipid analogs as transport reporters. These assays have been used in previous work to show that phospholipid translocation in biogenic (self-synthesizing) membranes such as the endoplasmic reticulum is facilitated by specific membrane proteins (flippases). To extend these studies to natural phospholipids while providing a framework to guide the purification of a flippase, we now describe an assay to measure the transbilayer translocation of dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine, a membrane-embedded phospholipid, in proteoliposomes generated from detergent-solubilized rat liver endoplasmic reticulum. Translocation was assayed using phospholipase A(2) under conditions where the vesicles were determined to be intact. Phospholipase A(2) rapidly hydrolyzed phospholipids in the outer leaflet of liposomes and proteoliposomes with a half-time of approximately 0.1 min. However, for flippase-containing proteoliposomes, the initial rapid hydrolysis phase was followed by a slower phase reflecting flippase-mediated translocation of phospholipids from the inner to the outer leaflet. The amplitude of the slow phase was decreased in trypsin-treated proteoliposomes. The kinetic characteristics of the slow phase were used to assess the rate of transbilayer equilibration of phospholipids. For 250-nm diameter vesicles containing a single flippase, the half-time was 3.3 min. Proportionate reductions in equilibration half-time were observed for preparations with a higher average number of flippases/vesicle. Preliminary purification steps indicated that flippase activity could be enriched approximately 15-fold by sequential adsorption of the detergent extract onto anion and cation exchange resins.  相似文献   

19.
Uptake hydrogenase (EC 1.12) from Azotobacter vinelandii has been purified 250-fold from membrane preparations. Purification involved selective solubilization of the enzyme from the membranes, followed by successive chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, Sephadex G-100, and hydroxylapatite. Freshly isolated hydrogenase showed a specific activity of 110 mumol of H2 uptake (min X mg of protein)-1. The purified hydrogenase still contained two minor contaminants that ran near the front on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels. The enzyme appears to be a monomer of molecular weight near 60,000 +/- 3,000. The pI of the protein is 5.8 +/- 0.2. With methylene blue or ferricyanide as the electron acceptor (dyes such as methyl or benzyl viologen with negative midpoint potentials did not function), the enzyme had pH optima at pH 9.0 or 6.0, respectively, It has a temperature optimum at 65 to 70 degrees C, and the measured half-life for irreversible inactivation at 22 degrees C by 20% O2 was 20 min. The enzyme oxidizes H2 in the presence of an electron acceptor and also catalyzes the evolution of H2 from reduced methyl viologen; at the optimal pH of 3.5, 3.4 mumol of H2 was evolved (min X mg of protein)-1. The uptake hydrogenase catalyzes a slow deuterium-water exchange in the absence of an electron acceptor, and the highest rate was observed at pH 6.0. The Km values varied widely for different electron acceptors, whereas the Km for H2 remained virtually constant near 1 to 2 microM, independent of the electron acceptors.  相似文献   

20.
NAD(P)(+)-reducing hydrogenases have been described to be composed of a diaphorase (HoxFU) and a hydrogenase (HoxYH) moiety. This study presents for the first time experimental evidence that in cyanobacteria, a fifth subunit, HoxE, is part of this bidirectional hydrogenase. HoxE exhibits sequence identities to NuoE of respiratory complex I of Escherichia coli. The subunit composition of the cyanobacterial bidirectional hydrogenase has been investigated. The oxygen labile enzyme complex was purified to close homogeneity under anaerobic conditions from Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 and Synechococcus sp. PCC 6301. The 647-fold and 1290-fold enriched purified enzyme has a specific activity of 46 micromol H(2) evolved (min mg protein)(-1) and 15 micromol H(2) evolved (min mg protein)(-1), respectively. H(2)-evolution of the purified enzyme of S. sp. PCC 6803 is highest at 60 degrees C and pH 6.3. Immunoblot experiments, using a polyclonal anti-HoxE antibody, demonstrate that HoxE co-purifies with the hydrogenase activity in S. sp. PCC 6301. SDS-PAGE gels of the purified enzymes revealed six proteins, which were partially sequenced and identified, besides one nonhydrogenase component, as HoxF, HoxU, HoxY, HoxH and, remarkably, HoxE. The molecular weight of the native protein (375 kDa) indicates a dimeric assembly of the enzyme complex, Hox(EFUYH)(2).  相似文献   

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